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| Come to the cabaret: The Bitches Are
Back! |
Fit for a
Queen By
B.A. Nilsson
The Bitches Are Back!
DeJohn’s, June 11
It’s no surprise that Nancy Timpanaro-Hogan
wrote and performs a one-woman tribute to Totie Fields.
Timpanaro-Hogan takes over the stage with a similarly brassy
approach to song, a great voice and an ad lib-rich style of
in-your-face comedy that serves her material well.
Ward Dales has matinee idol good looks and
a tear-your-heart-out tenor; he’s a little more arch, a little
more reserved. Nate Buccieri resembles a young Tom Stoppard
and brings a Stoppard-esque sense of intelligence and surprise
to the music he arranges and performs—and he turns out to be a
dynamite singer as well.
Their show, The Bitches Are Back!, made use
of the third floor of DeJohn’s as a cabaret space, and the
show is a reminder that the Capital Region has been
notoriously indifferent to a style of entertainment that’s
vital to Manhattan’s theater scene.
An eclectic mix of songs is driven by
theme, performer personality—whatever it takes to keep the
energy going. Usually the material is drawn from the pop and
theater realm, and this program was no different. The nonstop
energy could have turned merely frantic, but skillful pacing
and timing—and a virtuoso use of harmony—kept the dramatic arc
compelling.
As is often and depressingly noted,
“Lavender Song,” an anthem of gay pride, dates from 1930s
Berlin but could have been written 40 years ago. Or 20 years
ago. Or yesterday. As a program opener, it allowed
Timpanaro-Hogan to work the crowd, addressing patrons by name
(she’s quite deft at collecting those before the show) and
tossing out sardonic quips. Dales, meanwhile, served as
her—you’ll pardon the expression—straight man when he wasn’t
adding his own voice to the blend.
Buccieri is a dynamo at the keyboard. He’s
a sensitive accompanist to his companions, and manages the
impossible-seeming feat of playing even as he’s joining them
in a close-harmony chorus. As they did in the song “True
Colors,” popularized by Cyndi Lauper and Phil Collins, and
which eased the tempo away from the high-power
opening.
Mechanicville native Timpanaro-Hogan gave a
précis of her theatrical life wrapped in a hilarious story
about auditioning for West Side Story and the
perseverance with which she’s pursued her singing career; the
others just told their stories in song. Not surprisingly, love
songs predominated, from “Taking the Wheel,” a hopeful song by
John Bucchino, to Julie Brown’s “I Like ’em Big and
Stupid.”
Although I’m a confirmed Rodgers and
Hammerstein hater, I was bowled over by Timpanaro-Hogan’s
version of “This Nearly Was Mine” from South Pacific;
with an aggressive, syncopated beat devised by her earlier
music director, Bob Bendorff, the song became less treacly and
much more about regret.
There were a couple of misfires. There’s no
point in trying to copy Peggy Lee’s chilled detachment in the
Leiber and Stoller classic “Is That All There Is?,” but it
still warrants more restraint than the trio provided. And
Dales mercilessly picked on Jerome Kern’s goofy little “Why
Was I Born?”—which the song may deserve by now, but I still
have Billie Holiday’s version in my ear.
They redeemed themselves with what’s termed
“The Mother of Us All Medley,” a dizzying trip through a wide
range of songs and stylings, with fragments of such numbers as
“Just Once” from The Fantasticks and “I Got Lost in His
Arms” and “Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe,” segueing
from one to the next until the finale, when “The Nearness of
You,” “I’m Always Chasing Rainbows” and “It Might as Well Be
Spring” were woven together in a virtuoso piece of showmanship
(and craftsmanship).
It’s a pricey offering—$25 a ticket, plus
two drinks—but it’s a much-needed form of entertainment for
the area that has found some excellent exponents in this
threesome. Catch one of the two shows this Saturday and you’ll
see what I mean.
The Little Chill
Aimee Mann, Ben Lee
The Egg, June 8
It’s not that often that you hear the
phrase “warm-up act” anymore. Maybe it’s due to the prevalence
in recent years of festival-style nostalgia shows with
multiple headliners; maybe the mid-level-act lobby has gotten
stronger over years and has been able to drive the vaguely
insulting term out of common use. Whatever the reason, it’s
been awhile since I’ve had reason to think about the function
of the warm-up. Specifically, it’s been since the last time I
saw Aimee Mann at the Egg, when Duncan Sheik filled that
role.
This year, Ben Lee and his band were in
that position. Lee’s melodic and blandly positive stuff was
perfect warm-up material. Just like Sheik’s similarly
inoffensive, tepidly engaging stuff, it had the recognizable
outline of pop music, with not much else to it. It’s a
midpoint, a gentle way of ramping up from the iPod to live
music presented with more angles, tangles and depth. And
Aimee’s got angles, yessiree bob, so juxtaposing them against
someone a little more yielding makes some dramatic
sense.
But, this year, Mann didn’t really bring
the barbs. In part that may have been due to the fact that her
new album, The Forgotten Arm, is a concept record
telling the story of a substance-abusing former boxer and his
girlfriend, a small-town girl running away from her troubles
by running headlong into others. Addiction, codependence,
self- destructive escapism, the looming threat of
betrayal—these are all themes Mann has used with poignant
success in the past. But something about the artistic
contrivance of the story’s framework has a distancing effect
on the new songs. The great appeal of Mann’s songs in the past
has been the way her own seeming world-weary fragility has
personalized them. Bachelor No. 2, her unflinchingly
brutal masterpiece, worked as well as it did because the
listener believed in the first-person presentation.
This is not to say that Mann’s songcraft
has suffered since then (though the intervening album, Lost
in Space, was a little scattered). The songs on
Forgotten Arm are tight and lyrically sharp as
ever—just lacking in some of the appealing forlorn
defensiveness of earlier work. So, the night’s real winners
were the songs from Bachelor. I mean, how can you beat
a song with lyrics like “Now that I’ve met you, would you
object to/Never seeing each other again?”
And it’d be tough to beat Mann’s band
either. Despite having to rely on a new bassist (on loan from
Patti Smith’s band), they handled the songs with admirable
ease and taste, reproducing the distinctive production touches
talented folks like Jon Brion have helped weave into Mann’s
recorded stuff and punching the material up to keep things
fresh (the outros especially featured some noticeable nods to
“the rawk”). Particular praise has got to go to guitarist
Julian Coryell (yep, Larry’s kid) for his work, and his
willingness to play—I swear this is true—“Free
Bird.”
And Mann gamely sang along—sort of (her ad
libbed “Don’t change the bird! Don’t even try!” is actually an
improvement). In fact, throughout the evening, the notoriously
acerbic Mann was warm, gracious and funny—which is nice, if
you like that kind of thing.
—John Rodat
Tiger on the Mic
M.I.A.
Pearl Street, June 10
As the DJ faded his warm-up set of classic
hiphop into the coarse beats of M.I.A.’s populist banger “Pull
up the People,” the short Sri Lankan singer bounded onto the
stage, all smiles and arm-waving enthusiasm. A galloping
tiger, projected onto a screen onstage, ran endlessly behind
her. Throughout the night, the backdrop showcased other images
from M.I.A.’s portfolio of politicized graffiti art, from
stenciled tanks to colorful strings of Tamil lettering, but
the tiger was M.I.A.’s unabashed reference to her family
history of resistance: Her father spent years as a Tamil Tiger
fighting for independence in Sri Lanka.
Now living in London, and leaving behind
art studies for music, M.I.A. has mashed together a bastard
alliance of sounds, less Far Eastern than Western, with traces
of hiphop, Jamaican dance hall and Brazilian funk. It’s a
bootie-shaking blend that sounds entirely novel to American
ears, and M.I.A.’s debut album, Arular, is all the rage
in underground dance, indie rock and hiphop circles. In a
word: M.I.A. is hot. The singer, whose given name is Maya
Arulpragasam, seemed grateful for the adoring crowd at Pearl
Street. Onstage, she makes a refreshing contrast to the
cleavage-popping Britneys of the world; dressed in a loose
yellow and green jumpsuit of Sri Lankan design, M.I.A. made no
effort to play-up her cuteness, which made her seem that much
cooler.
Her second song, “Fire Fire” began with the
thud of harsh syncopated beats—Timbaland taken to the extreme
(the song name checks Missy Elliott and her producer, as well
as Lou Reed, the Pixies and the Beasties). As the DJ, who was
filling in for M.I.A.’s usual turntable collaborator Diplo,
weaved in tidbits of the Bangles’ “Walk Like an Egyptian,” the
crowd cheered. Florida DJ Diplo first paired the two
incongruous tracks on a bootleg called Piracy Funds
Terrorism, which melded Arular with American hiphop
and Brazillian funk tracks and has become something of an
underground sensation. “Diplo ain’t here, so this is coming
off the mix tape,” M.I.A. announced before “URAQT,” an
insanely catchy track that Diplo mixed with the Sanford and
Son theme song for his bootleg (replete with a sample of
Fred Sanford’s catchphrase, “you big dummy”).
Diplo’s mysterious absence on M.I.A.’s
recent tour of the Northeast has spurred rumors that the two
have parted ways for good, but M.I.A. gave no indication at
Pearl Street whether that was true. M.I.A.’s backup singer,
Miss Cherry, took the lead on “Sunshowers,” a song with a
sweet chorus underlain with a processed, tribal beat. Many of
the songs on Arular were recorded on a Roland MC-505
Groovebox music sequencer and drum machine, and the gritty,
glitchy percussion has parallels in grime, a U.K. variation of
hiphop that sounds purposefully artificial and organic at the
same time. M.I.A. hopped back and forth, waving her finger in
the air, on “10 Dollar,” one of her most fired up tracks.
“What can I get for 10 dolla?” M.I.A. scatted, holding her mic
out to the crowd. “Anything you want,” the crowd chanted back,
as the DJ mixed brash Brazilian Rio, or baile funk,
with the opening strains of the Eurythmics’ “Sweet Dreams.”
Pretty hot. “We need to keep this party going,” M.I.A.
shouted, clearly enjoying herself, as she closed out the set
with her album’s first hit, “Galang,” which inspired
sing-alongs despite being filled with near indecipherable
slang.
—Kirsten Ferguson
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